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4->''"I am honour-bound to warn you to stay on the path through the castle. Straying from the path could mean your destruction.\
5You killed my friend, woman. Stray from your path."''
6-->-- '''Wyvern''', ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'', "The Kindly Ones"
7
8The heroes are journeying through some dangerous area -- nearly always a [[EnchantedForest dark and mysterious forest]]. A wizard or other such guide has sent them on their way with one piece of advice: Stay on the Path. Straying from the path will lead to "something" bad.
9
10The heroes will nearly ''always'' leave the path at some point. Expect danger to ensue; they may also find that ShortCutsMakeLongDelays. If they truly ''have'' to come back to the path to progress, see YellowBrickRoad, or RailRoading when it's a result of game design or GameMaster.
11
12Frequently a metaphor for "keeping on the straight and narrow path" of moral behaviour, and ignoring distractions that [[EvilFeelsGood look more inviting or interesting than the path ahead.]] The reasons given for doings so are often [[GoodFeelsGood that it will be worth it.]]
13
14Video games are built on budgets, no matter what, so a smart dev team will cheat where they can. One cheat is to highlight a path that they intend for the player to follow. The highlights don't have to be obvious - just lights, warm colors, convenient approaches to an objective, the infamous chest-high walls, and so on. It allows the player the illusion of freedom when they really can't get too far from the game's set pieces. The devs can then devote less time to things "off the path." The cost of leaving the path? Wasting time, ruining your immersion by taking nonsensical actions just to "see if the world is real," being exposed to the second-rate textures, sky boxes, and objects which are pure filler, losing your immersion and time by blundering into the InsurmountableWaistHighFence, expending more resources fighting pointless enemies, and worst of all - finding nothing of interest and growing bored.
15
16No shortage of games invert this trope, rewarding the player for when they do NOT Stay on the Path, or zig-zag it, cluing the player in subtly when it might be a good idea to stray from the path.
17
18If the heroes leave the path because they were told not to leave it, it's also a case of ForbiddenFruit. This trope is a subtrope of HorrorHatesARulebreaker.
19----
20!!Examples
21[[foldercontrol]]
22
23[[folder:Comic Books]]
24* ''ComicBook/SpiderMan'': In ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderManJMichaelStraczynski'' Vol. 2 #46, ComicBook/DoctorStrange sends Peter to the Astral Plane to fight a villain, with a warning not to leave the designated path. He strays off after seeing some random giant spider-shaped thingie and accidentally unleashes a spider-eating Wasp spirit named Shathra who makes his life miserable for a while afterward.
25* ''ComicBook/TheSandman1989'', "The Kindly Ones":
26** Cluracan comes to visit his sister Nuala in Dream's castle, and out of curiosity, disregards the doorkeeper's warning to stay on the path. As a result, he ends up creating his own nemesis.
27** On another occasion:
28-->''"I have spoken to the lord of this realm. He has given you permission to enter the castle, and will grant you audience. I am honour-bound to warn you to stay on the path through the castle. Straying from the path could mean your destruction. You killed my friend, woman. Stray from your path."''
29* In the original ''ComicBook/TheBooksOfMagic'', Tim Hunter and Doctor Occult take a trip into [[TheFairFolk Fairyland]]. Occult gives the warning; Tim actually stays on the path fairly well, until [[Myth/RussianMythologyAndTales Baba Yaga]] uses an illusion of the Doctor to convince him to step off it...and then tries to eat him.
30* ''ComicBook/Robin1993'': Tim meets a strange old man named Stephen who can take "shortcuts" through the woods that get him to places faster than a truck going at full speed. Stephen warns Tim that anyone who looses track of Stephen in the woods is be lost there forever. While running through with Stephen to try and save a kidnapped child Tim notes that there are [[EnchantedForest plant and animal species in Stephen's woods that don't belong in North America and he can't hear the cars on what should be the very nearby roadway]].
31[[/folder]]
32
33[[folder:Fairy Tales]]
34* Literature/LittleRedRidingHood is thus warned when going to Grandma's House because she might otherwise encounter SavageWolves.
35[[/folder]]
36
37[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
38* In ''WesternAnimation/FindingNemo'' the School of fish that gives Dory and Marlin directions to Sydney warns the pair to go THROUGH a particular undersea trench, rather than over it. Marlin chose to ignore that warning (on the grounds that it looks like death trap), while Dory did try to persuade otherwise, however, goes along with him anyway due to Marlin distracting her so she would forget she was disagreeing, leading to a near deadly encounter with jellyfish on her end.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
42* The hero of ''Film/AnAmericanWerewolfInLondon'' and his [[TheLancer wing-man]] are given the warning "Stay on the road, and beware of the moon!" They ignore the first, and don't understand the second. As a result, one of them dies, and the other becomes a werewolf.
43* ''Film/TheCompanyOfWolves'': Granny tells Rosaleen not to stray from the path. She does and finds a werewolf.
44* ''Film/TheGoldenChild'': Before undergoing a test, Eddie Murphy's character is warned to (among other things) "Stay on the path". During the test, the path he's on suddenly explodes, and he angrily demands to know what's going on. A voice tells him that he has to know when to break the rules (an important clue for completing the SecretTestOfCharacter).
45* ''Film/{{Psycho}}'': Marion discovers that she has missed her exit while driving in the dark and the rain, and gotten off the main road onto the old road. This was in 1960, when the highway system was new, and she made a very common mistake people made then, which would have made the audience nod in recognition. She stops at the Bates Motel to ask directions, and decides to stay the night before trying to find her way back in the dark. After being spooked by an essentially harmless, but seemingly menacing, policeman when she tried sleeping in her car the night before. She feels sorry for Norman, who is lonely, hasn't rented a room in a long time, and ''seems'' so harmless.
46* ''Film/ApocalypseNow'' has "never get out of the boat" as the guideline for going down the RiverOfMadness. A ferocious man-eating tiger appears when the characters first get ashore.
47* ''Film/{{Hoomania}}'' is about a boy who gets transported into a board game with a warning that he must stay on the path in order to win the game. He first goes off of the path by taking a shortcut which leads him to two thieves who trick him into helping them steal a treasure chest and then throw him down a hill back onto the path. The second time, he drives a rocket car into a giant pinball machine out of curiosity, which activates and bounces him around, destroying the car and dumping him far away from the path, forcing him to take a row boat back to the path. He almost lets himself get pulled off the path a third time by a bunch of lazy creatures telling him to relax, which would have caused him to lose the game due to it being his third strike, but this time he listens to the warning and runs. The point of the game was to teach him a lesson about making wise choices. This may have been inspired by ''Literature/ThePilgrimsProgress''.
48[[/folder]]
49
50[[folder:Literature]]
51* ''Literature/ThePilgrimsProgress'' used this as a metaphor for staying faithful to Christianity. The characters constantly persist in [[FailureIsTheOnlyOption straying off the path]].
52* ''Literature/RowanOfRin'': The heroes had to journey through a swamp that through some means conjured up illusions of loved ones drowning in the deep mud just off the path. If you rush off to save them [[spoiler:you end up drowning in the mud.]]
53* ''Literature/TheHobbit'' has Gandalf give this advice to Bilbo and the dwarves about Mirkwood Forest. Inverted in ''Literature/TheLordOfTheRings'' when Gandalf tells Frodo and Sam to stay ''off'' the roads, but they run afoul of the Nazgûl as a result of Merry and Pippin not following the rule.
54* ''Literature/{{Stardust}}'': Creator/NeilGaiman is a fan of this trope, as seen in the Comic Books folder. Anyone who strays from the path through the Serewood will fall victim to murderous plants.
55* Creator/RayBradbury's ''Literature/ASoundOfThunder'' justifies this trope: leaving the path while on a hunting trip in the past could lead to TemporalMutability problems a la ButterflyOfDoom. A character messes up, leaves the path and steps on a butterfly. Dystopia ensues.
56* ''Literature/HarryPotter'':
57** ''Literature/HarryPotterAndThePhilosophersStone'': Hagrid warns Harry not to leave the path in the Forbidden Forest. Off the path he finds life-threatening peril and a creep drinking unicorn blood.
58** ''Literature/HarryPotterAndThePrisonerOfAzkaban'': In a more minor sense, one of their 3rd year Defense Against the Dark Arts classes is about hinkypunks, who lure travelers off the path with ghost lights, usually to their victims' deaths, and thus how to resist their charms by staying on a given path.
59* David from ''Literature/TheBookOfLostThings'' is warned to stay off the road; when he strays to pick an apple, he is captured by a hunter.
60* In ''Literature/DreamPark'', visitors at the Chamber of Horrors attraction are warned to stay on the green glowing path, as they pass through a holographic diorama of underwater terrors. One woman steps off the path anyway, and [[spoiler: is instantly snatched away and torn to pieces by a shark and an aquatic zombie! Lucky for Dream Park's liability insurance, she turns out to be a hologram too.]]
61* One of the main themes in the first book of the ''Literature/TheEdgeChronicles'', mainly because it's set in the Deepwoods, where EverythingIsTryingToKillYou. This mentality even extends to children's sports in the woodtroll villages - when protagonist Twig "strays from the path" during a game, he's beaten up by the other kids even though there's technically no rule against it. ''No-one'' strays from the path.
62* In the Literature/{{Dragaera}} universe, if you're in the world of the dead and you leave the path, you'll never be able to find it again, wandering for all eternity even if you're very much alive.
63* ''Literature/TheFamousFive'':
64** In ''Five Fall into Adventure'', the Five leave a wheel-rut path in a very dense wood to shelter from a storm, and end up hopelessly lost, walking miles through the wood, without even the sun to guide them.
65** In ''Five on a Hike Together'', the Five have to take a treacherous route through marshes, with strict instructions to stick to the path. Later, their enemies pursue them, and end up stuck in the marshes when they leave the path.
66* ''Literature/{{Xanth}}'' features "magic paths" which are designated safe travelling points. Said paths are sometimes one-way such that if you step off of it it disappears. The trope is played with half the time where the protagonists lose the path, find the path is no longer safe, or leave the path. The other half of the time, it's used as a convenient shorthand for "nothing exciting happened between here and there because they were walking on the enchanted path".
67* In one of Creator/JackVance's ''Literature/DyingEarth'' novellas, a traveler's father gives him a charm, which will protect him so long as he remains on the road.
68* When traveling the [[MagicalLand Nevernever]] in ''Literature/TheDresdenFiles'', wizards usually stick to the safer Ways, lest they wander off into an area that is horrifyingly dangerous. In the Nevernever, quite literally anything can happen.
69* ''Literature/RulesForVanishing'': One of the rules of the road in the Briar Glen woods is not to leave it while traveling. When Sara briefly runs off the road, a monster is attracted to the group's location.
70[[/folder]]
71
72[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
73* ''Series/BabylonFive'':
74** When Ivanova is hooked into the Great Machine in "Voices of Authority", she is advised by Draal to "stay on the path" when the Eye of Z'ha'dum somehow detects her probing and almost succeeds in mentally compelling her to go towards it. The "path" was a mental visualization given by the machine as a guide away from this Eye.
75** When traveling in hyperspace, it is important to follow the hyperspace beacons, and stay in range of their signals, so as not to become permanently lost in hyperspace--something that almost happens to an explorer ship in the episode "A Distant Star".
76* ''Series/TheInvaders1967'' begins like this, as the protagonist takes a WrongTurnAtAlbuquerque while "[[ShortcutsMakeLongDelays looking for a shortcut that he never found]]" and accidentally discovers the AlienInvasion going on...
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
80* ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheLost'' makes it very clear that wandering off the path in the Hedge can be a very, ''very'' bad thing. Not only do the Thorns that make up most of the Hedge drink a Changeling's power (or a human's ''soul''), but [[OurGoblinsAreDifferent hobgoblins]] lurk in some of the deeper parts. The [[TheFairFolk Gentry]] occasionally take their strolls through it as well.
81* ''TabletopGame/ChangelingTheDreaming'', has elements of this, despite being LighterAndSofter. Wandering off the Silver Path while wandering the Dreaming is a very good way to get lost in some of the deeper delusions of the collective unconsciousness.
82* ''TabletopGame/DungeonsAndDragons'':
83** Module I5 ''Lost Tomb of Martek''. Before entering the Crystal Prism the {{PC}}s read runes that say "Walk that path straight and narrow". If they don't do so, the Iron Phoenix's powerful attacks will probably destroy them.
84** Module I12 ''Egg of the Phoenix''. In one section of the adventure the [=PCs=] are told "If a path is given, do not stray from it". They really need to follow this advice. If they don't, not only will they not be able to complete the mission and possibly get lost 200 million years in the past, but if they stray off the Platinum Path in the Black Forest they'll end up getting massively energy drained and almost certainly die.
85* Subverted in the adventure ''TabletopGame/TombOfHorrors'', where following the mosaic path on a hallway's floor will lead you past a couple of pit traps, then ''directly into'' another one. Not that anyone who so much as considers tackling the ''Tomb of Horrors'' has any excuse for not testing the floor [[EverythingTryingToKillYou (and the walls, the ceiling, the air, the doors, the doorlatches...)]]
86[[/folder]]
87
88[[folder:Theatre]]
89* Theatre/RedTheRedRidingHoodMusical: Being an adaptation of Literature/LittleRedRidingHood, of course Red is told by her mother to "stay on the path", and [[ForegoneConclusion of course she doesn't.]] And, true to the original fairy tale, she ends up meeting, well, [[TheBigBadWolf you know.]]
90[[/folder]]
91
92[[folder:Video Games]]
93* Valve's Developer Commentary in ''VideoGame/Left4Dead'' pointed out a few ways they used this trope, for those who are interested. Everything from car headlights to color schemes are chosen so players can intuit their way through the level. This is important because a little exploration can be very helpful, but a lot of it guarantees more enemies will spawn and possibly overwhelm the players.
94* ''VideoGame/AlanWake'': The enemies are immune to attacks if not exposed to brilliant light first, and they are powerless in bright light. Gameplay consists of a run and gun from light to light. When things go south, following the path from light to light is the best way to progress.
95* ''VideoGame/ThePath'': The player must stray the girl from the path and meet their wolf in order to succeed in the girl's route in the story, rather than following the game's instructions to stay on the path. Following the path gets you a failure screen.
96* ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'':
97** The Haunted Wasteland in ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'' forces you to follow the flags; going off-route will cause you to be swallowed by the desert winds (and teleported back to a checkpoint). A similar puzzle occurs near Pinnacle Rock in the western ocean of ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask Majora's Mask]]''.
98** ''VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink'': Staying on roads neutralizes enemy encounters. While you're on it, no encounters pop up, and if you spawn some then move back onto the path, the "battle" is a barren plain devoid of enemies you can just walk out of. Naturally, there are many places you can't get to by staying on the path. Early in the game, you'll want these encounters (free ExperiencePoints) but as the game begins to go from NintendoHard to [[PlatformHell "Miyamoto, you sadist!"]] they become great ways to die horribly (and naturally, at this point, much harder to avoid.)
99* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'': One of the loading screen tips is that players are much less likely to encounter monsters when following a path. Generally true, but there are also some regions where particularly deadly enemies follow the roads, and some roads lead directly to dungeons or the cities of the opposite faction. Pre-expanion Rexxar followed a very long path through Durotar and Feralas, and was death to any Alliance character who didn't see him coming in time.
100* In ''VideoGame/NeverwinterNights'', a village has been suspended out of time by Lathander. When you get to the castle you have 3 paths to choose from. If you stay on the correct path, then you get a note from Lathander complementing you on your choice of the middle balanced way. In the others you get attacked by deamon or devils and appropriately chastied by Lathander.
101* In ''VideoGame/BlackSigil'', you must cross a desert. You are told to follow the path (marked by specific plants), else you will encounter {{Sand Worm}}s, which are rather tough for you at that point. Straying from the path also means interesting items.
102* In ''VideoGame/HalfLife2'' during the coast section, straying too far into the ocean will result in a swarm of unkillable leeches coming in from the depths to kill you.
103* In ''VideoGame/FalloutNewVegas'', low-level characters can do quite a bit of exploring in relative safety if they stick to the crumbling roads that will eventually lead the player to New Vegas (as long as they heed any [[SchmuckBait "KEEP OUT" signs]] they come across). Wander just a little way off the path (or try to go immediately north to New Vegas from Goodsprings) and the restored-to-their-former-magnificence [[BossInMookClothing Deathclaws]] and their adorable new sidekicks, the [[DemonicSpiders Cazadores]], await you.
104* The ''VideoGame/FinalFantasy'' series:
105** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyII'' followed this trope to a T in the early game; despite an open world map that you could actually explore a majority of with a Chocobo, straying from your intended path on foot was an easy trip to the Game Over screen as weak Hornets and Goblins suddenly turned into enemies far beyond your current level, with nothing to indicate you were in instant-death territory. As far as the simple graphics were concerned, the grassy plains tiles that hold meek little beginner's encounters, and the grassy tiles that held imminent death, looked exactly the same. You could even run into this right from the beginning of the game- ignoring your first objective in the north to go take a stroll on the beach to the south? Say hello to murderous mid-game enemies that will drain the life out of your party in seconds. Doubles as a PeninsulaOfPowerLeveling with the aid of a certain White Mage, though.
106** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII'' decided to do away with the insanely powerful encounters, and simply just kill your party in a cutscene if you wandered off the path to go exploring somewhere before you were meant to at certain points in the game. Trying to take a stroll without certain key items could result in the party sinking to a muddy death, or being zapped into oblivion. And just like II, the simplistic graphics of the time meant you could run into both of these instant death traps purely on accident.
107** In ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyV'', a moogle shows you the way to the moogle village. He walks into a patch of desert, shakes his head "no", and avoids the desert all the rest of the way. When you take control, walking on the path will result in no RandomEncounters, while the encounters in the desert are, at least for your likely current level, likely to spawn a BossInMookClothing.
108* Near the last third of ''VideoGame/{{SOMA}}'', Simon Jarett has to enter the [[EldritchOceanAbyss Abyss]], where light barely travels, and the route to station Tau requires following a trail of lights that act as markers. Straying from this path results in being ripped to shreds by [[spoiler: rabid sea creatures infused with [[MissappliedPhlebotinum Structure Gel]], which also makes them averse to light]]. And to make things worse, Simon also has to endure a powerful ocean current, and some of the lights are disabled.
109* The guards in ''VideoGame/TheElderScrollsIVOblivion'' will sometimes advise you to do just this.
110* After entering a dark cellar in ''VideoGame/AmnesiaTheDarkDescent'' Daniel has a flashback to the first time he went through the area. He questions why it's kept so dark, but Alexander insists that he not stray from the lighted path. Since the only monsters in the castle at the time were the ones under Alexander's control, it's not clear what he thought would happen if Daniel didn't follow him.
111* At the beginning of ''VideoGame/AfraidOfMonsters'', David is told to "follow the red." What follows is a trip through a surreal nightmare realm, which changes from pitch black walls and floors to insane, tilted rooms. Colored dots lead your way, and if you don't follow the red, you'll end up at the bottom of the pit.
112* In ''Monster Girl Quest! Paradox RPG'', you're advised to stay on the path when in the world beyond the first Tartarus. On the path there are no RandomEncounters, but off the path there are incredible powerful [[spoiler:angels]] who will almost certainly crush you in a single turn.
113[[/folder]]
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115[[folder:Webcomics]]
116* ''Webcomic/NoRestForTheWicked'': [[http://www.forthewicked.net/archive/02-16.html Perrault urges that this is much wiser than following a deranged madwoman]] through a forest.
117* ''Webcomic/CharbyTheVampirate'': It's a very bad idea for a human to stray from a path in Kellwood Forest as the place is much ''much'' bigger than it looks on human maps and is full of monsters and TheFairFolk.
118* ''Webcomic/SpinaCage'': Adrian is told he absolutely must not step a single foot off the path if he wants to get back home from the enchanted forest. When he is lured off of it by what appears to be someone in distress he is quickly paralyzed by one of TheFairFolk and nearly eaten.
119[[/folder]]
120
121[[folder:Visual Novels]]
122* ''VisualNovel/DoubleHomework'': Parodied by the fake bus driver (formerly a fake sea captain) who’s driving to Barbarossa. He gives a spiel about how it's "literally illegal" to move, but the protagonist, who’s a man on a mission, insists on cutting across country. The "driver" only halfheartedly tries to stop him.
123[[/folder]]
124
125[[folder:Web Original]]
126* ''Website/SCPFoundation'': '''That one [[EnchantedForest anomalous forest]] that is filed between 3999 and 4001''' has a path through it. This is the least dangerous space in the whole area, and agents checking up on '''[[HorrorHatesARulebreaker the place where you have to follow strange rules]] and [[TheScottishTrope not name anything]]''' are advised to stay firmly on it, as it is the only way to actually get anywhere and will eventually lead you back home. Nobody who's stepped off the path has ever returned. And even those who do stay on the path will run into '''[[FairFolk strange beings]]''' that they must treat very carefully.
127[[/folder]]
128
129[[folder:Western Animation]]
130* Zig-zagged in a ''WesternAnimation/MonkeyDust'' skit where Geoff goes to a public Cottager outing somewhere in the murky, dark English countryside. In a nearby pub, a grizzled, toothless old man warns him not to stray too far off the path. Geoff asks him why.
131--> '''Grizzled Old Man:''' [[MoodWhiplash Because that's where all them cottagers are; on the path.]] [[DirtyOldMan You'll get more cock if you stay on the path! *does sucking-off-motion and smiles*]]
132** Later it turns out that he really should have stayed on the path, [[spoiler:after being mauled by a [[{{Pun}} Queer-]][[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent Wolf]]]].
133* In the ''WesternAnimation/SillySymphony'' short ''The Big Bad Wolf'', the Practical Pig advises Little Red Riding Hood and his two giddy brothers to take the long road to Grandma's house, since the shortcut goes through the forest where the Big Bad Wolf lives.
134* ''WesternAnimation/PhineasAndFerb'' has the half-hour-long episode ''[[Recap/PhineasAndFerbWizardOfOdd Wizard of Odd]]'', wherein Candace invokes this trope, but it is ultimately averted in practice. She insists on following the yellow sidewalk as Isabella the Good Witch instructed and ignores Phineas and Ferb's more "fun" travel ideas...only to find she simply missed out on enjoyment and that nothing awful would have happened if she had gone with her brothers. It turns out that Isabella instructs ''everyone'' heading to Bustopolis to follow that sidewalk.
135[[/folder]]
136
137[[folder:Real Life]]
138* As said on the DontGoInTheWoods page, hiking off-trail is generally advised against, as one has a big chance of being lost and being found too late, as hikers have been found starved or near starving sometimes not 100 feet from a trail. Likewise, in some parts of California, there's a good chance one might stumble into drug cartel and their operation and/or their traps or find the last one who did. People take those warnings ''very'' seriously.
139** More mundanely, a trail is a path along which the soil is so eroded and impacted by footsteps that it's too dense for anything to grow. More people going off-trail means more eroded soil, which makes nature just that much less beautiful. Also, more trail means more paths and more confusion for future hikers.
140[[/folder]]
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